« first day (2203 days earlier)      last day (2115 days later) » 

15:00
Or am I talking shit
Today I'm dense, so bear with me please.
correct, you need to consider the clustered key and primary key do not have to be the same thing, even though that's the default
consider them independently, and then decide a clustered key that avoids fragmentation, and a primary key that is there to uniquely identify a row
War
War
what should i look for in order to optimise update performance
There is still a performance penalty on the queries selecting the data, but it's impact is limited
I like the idea, it also appears to separate concerns between data relationships and actual business logic, which should be done on the software side.
I read that years back, its a bit lacking in details but its good stuff
15:02
@War I guess having a proper index build is the major concern, rebuild the binary tree if needeD?
@War - check the query plan for a start :)
Now where do I send invoices for all this :)
War
War
oddly enough ... i have system for that
it's a bit slow though
so you might get paid in a few years
@Andrew I will always carry you in my heart. That's a perk you cant buy with $$.
War
War
@Andrew you said you don't like ORM's ... how do you translate objects in to SQL statements ???
surely you don't write your own entity change tracking ?
DAO's translate logical domain model objects, to data persistence.
War
War
15:07
so you have to build one for each entity type from the domain model
that way, domain objects, have no notion / representation of the physical data structure that they are stored on, and in fact allow structure changes without changing business logic, just the dao
yes - more code but on a high volume system, you need the control on the SQL anyway
War
War
i have the separation
and I always want to avoid developers ever getting into the mental habit of thinking table = domain object
War
War
I just aint sure how to implement things efficiently on SQL server
logical model != physical
War
War
15:08
or any db server for that matter
our API's are OData based though
I prefer lightweight models as well, preferably immutable
War
War
how can you provide that without there being at least some level deep relationship between an endoint and a table
our api's are made queryable because each client has their own business process requirements
so we can't just implement one method / a known set of questions
we have to have a means to say "Here's CRUD functionality for a set of T"
Makes life harder, but you can still abstract logical to physical, even at the DB tier via stored procedures
War
War
I have at the bottom of my stack an interface for IDataContext
that has simple methods like ...
Task Update<T>(T entity)
then behind that interface i have my EF implementation of a particular context
so I can abstract however is needed
Do you have an object per table?
War
War
15:12
mostly yeh
but not all tables are exposed
and some DTO types are exposed
so your domain model logical model, is nearly the same as your physical
War
War
but DTO types are essentially like a DB view ... read only
pretty dam close yeh
yeah, that for me leads to serious issues around atomicity
War
War
but i made the entity types smart too ... so they aren't just data containers
where related 'objects' are not actually together and can be mutated apart
War
War
15:13
yeh i can do that
so i can for example ... store half an entity in one db and ther other half in another
If data across multiple tables is an atomic unit of data, to be considered 1 instance of an entity, they should be presented like that
how / where its stored is different
to the domain model, I'd want that 1 object to be accessed as 1 object, not as a collection of 10 objects independent of each other
War
War
I could do that but it's crazy rare that the case is needed for it
how I choose to store that object, and the logic in persisting it is the job of the DAO, its the translator,
War
War
hmmm
the datacontext makes the decision
but within the business layer, I don't want data from 10 tables to appear as 10 objects which are related but can be accessed individually
its 1 object, represent it as 1, act on it as one etc
War
War
15:15
so I would have some method in the layer above that does something like ...
context.Insert(new Foo { ... });
There is no one size fits all, but ORMs just encourage people to consider table structure == object model
War
War
then the context is I gues slike your DAO's
If foo is a multi-dimensional domain object, yes
War
War
yeh i've gone with typical EF in a way but putting it behind an interface means I don't have to
if foo represents a single table, then no.
Let's talk in real terms, such as an invoice
So you have an invoice , and that invoice can have line items on it
War
War
15:17
yup
In your model, can you access those line items outside / independent of the invoice?
War
War
so it makes sense to store the header and lines in two different tables
I have an endpoint for each
and can independently pull either out
or both
It's not the tables we are talking about though, the domain objects
War
War
on either endpoint
yeah, that's where personally I wouldn't go that route
its an invoice, the line items belong to it, they shouldn't be accessed or mutated outside of it
War
War
15:18
so in my api layer ... because i'm using OData i have the relationship model for that api
the API model need not be the same as the ORM's data model
but it usually is at the moment for simplicity
When you start representing them as different objects / exposed individually, you are in effect letting the physical DB structure implementation bleed across interface boundaries
War
War
I get what you're saying ... so if I have an invoice ... I should / perhaps could ... store that as a single row ... but on the api expose it as a parent with children
Can an invoice line item exist on it's own outside of an invoice - in any logical manner, or does a line item always exist within an invoice
You can store it on multiple rows, but you expose it in the domain model as a single multi-dimensional object
War
War
I haven't checked but i'm pretty sure the db model requires a line item to have a header reference
so lines cannot exist on their own
they often would
so in the DB if the value can not be independent, why in code would we allow such a concept
War
War
15:21
what do you mean by "single multi-dimensional object" ?
from a logical model perspective, they are part of the same object, the fact we store them relationally across multiple tables is a physical storage thing, it has nothing to do with the domain modelling
An invoice has multiple attributes, some of which are not singular, but lists
War
War
I guess that sort of depends on your definition of "object"
are we using the OOP definition here ?
thus you can conceive of it as not 1 dimensional or 2 dimensional, but multi-dimensional
I'm using the domain model definition
War
War
as in "something intelligent that has immutable data within"
I'm approaching it from a domain model perspective, and keeping domain model independent to physical model
War
War
15:24
the immutable data we store "however the storage layer wants" ... but the object is a single instance of thing that can only ever be a single thing
if a child item can not exist outside of its parent, then it should never be accessible except through its parent
if a line item can't exist outside of an invoice, then you should access them through the invoice
War
War
yeh so in the API layer for invoices ... the defnition of a line item is known as part of the model ... but you can only get lines by asking for an invoice with it's lines
you can't just ask for the lines on their own
OData allows me to define both scenarios
now - one size doesn't fit all here, and I'm not wanting to be prescriptive, but this is where different disciplines, data architects / DB architects / software architects end up in a tug of war
War
War
yeh ... i'm just trying to understand your architecture and how that's different to mine
architects are funny people
So you have an invoice logical object, with child line items - how that is stored in the DB, is the problem for the DAO
War
War
15:26
very strong minded
and ideally, the DAO is interfaced and dependency inversioned allowing you to swap in / out different implementations
War
War
I always get confused when people talk about this difference between domain and data
Difference between logical and physical
One of the nice things in DDD (Domain Driven Design) was the description / definition of aggregates
War
War
I can see there being a need to store things differently to the business logic ... but structurally ... weather you talk about logical or physical it's still the same raw data
The good old Martin Fowler - aggregates is defining an atomic unit of data in effect
War
War
15:28
eh every time i put an endpoint together i'm thinking "does this thing make sense to be an aggregate root"
I never know where Martin stands on stuff
In lots of different places :)
War
War
he was one of those that banged on about OOP (which devolved in to rediculousness)
then it got killed in favour of some other model
Aggregates though is a well documented concept in DDD, and is in effect talking about domain modelling and not confusing it with physical modelling
War
War
the current buzz term is DDD
DDD has been around a long time
at least 10 years surely, if not more
War
War
15:30
yeh it's just recently become more popular
not so sure about the 'recently' was doing it 5 years ago
War
War
tbh i don't much stock in enforcing patterns rigidly
you were ... sure ..
2004 DDD came out
so I was late to the party
2.^ Jump up to: a b Evans, Eric (2004). Domain-Driven Design: Tackling Complexity in the Heart of Software. Addison-Wesley. ISBN 978-032-112521-7. Retrieved August 12, 2012..
War
War
I've seen us go from structural, to procedural, to OOP, to functional, to all this DDD stuff
this happens about once every 5 to 10 years
and we've gone round in circles too ..
yup, the joyous world of IT and reinventing the wheel - we are good at it
War
War
15:32
I don't put much stock in enforcing patterns like that rigidly only in a stack being consistent with itself
if I was to describe my code it I would say its "a bit of badly implemented everything from every popular pattern but in small enough pieces that they fit nicely where they should"
so I have for example ... an anemic object domain ... but they are smart enough to know things like ...
Given an invoice I can ask an invoice invoice.Approve(user) ... so given a user the invoice can determine if that user can approve it and then if so apply it's own internal changes
That's why I'll not be prescriptive but can describe the thinking I might do / implement, but I'm not going to say everyone should do X, where X is some technique that is technique de jour which is being pushed with zeal.
War
War
many then go a step further and the OOP purists would be like "and that object should also know how to save itself in a db"
I don't do that
absolutely not
War
War
my objects are purely logic ... then I have data contexts be given the object to store
That object should at best know what method to call on a DB dependency injected to it
it should have no knowledge of how to do it
War
War
15:36
right but i've spoken to OOP fanatics that say you're wrong
if a business object knows how to save itself, its doing more than 1 thing
yes, I did mention avoid zealousness :)
War
War
i've also been told that procedural programming today is bad ... which i find hilarious
and having LINQ for example ... a functional API working n my smart OOP like objects
mixes concepts
both OOP and functional nuts hate me for that
In my preferred software concept, the domain objects / model are at the centre of the world, and the DB DAOs are a dependency injected concept
War
War
then the API layer consists of controllers which are basically procedural hooks on http calls
so i have a bit of everything lol
A domain object which knows how to save itself, does not obey SOLID principles on the spot
War
War
15:38
SOLID isn't proper OOP (depending on who you ask)
Single responsibility - no
War
War
though I agree ... SOLID principles are valuable as hell
Dependency inversion - not when it doesn't take in the DB dependency it isnt
War
War
you can't have DI in purist OOP model
I've lived through the heavyweight object era of the 90s / early 2000s, it wasn't that great
War
War
15:39
purist OOP models are literally stacks of object trees and nothing more ... sort of functional but with classes lol
it certainly does not make for nicely testable code
War
War
programmers are too finicky IMO and too worked up about patterns and practices
generally speaking of course
Shouldn't matter, the tech arch and software arch should be the ones setting the terms of reference for standards
with appropriate governance in place
otherwise you can just have chaos as different developers develop with entirely different styles of thinking
War
War
the problem historically has been that most IT managers didn't come from IT
You won't please all the developers no matter what you choose, but you do want to be consistent in that choice, whatever it is.
War
War
15:41
thats slowly changing
well yeh that too lol
I personally prefer to avoid development environments where there is a high level of zealousness for a specific thing / technique / whatever
War
War
yeh ... i tend to go with what works best rather than what some book or blog site based on some specific pattern would have us forced to follow
As though there is a single 'right' way, a silver bullet that always applies - which we know is not the case.
War
War
I guess it's like anything ... use the right tool for the job
but all these pattern pushers seem to push that their pattern is the right tool for every job lol
lol
right ... brb ... need to walk the dog or he's gonna murder me
There are some aspects of the DB which are more prescriptive, but mainly that is given X or Y, X will perform better, your choice....
15:59
I'm out for the day, I have to fix a piece of shit website that sets permissions every time it reloads and retrieves them from the view with every new page.
And returns "Unknown" as a plain text string if it fails to find anything.
People are complaining why they get "unknown" when they enter a wrong user/pw combination, the developer who made it claims it's pretty normal, and a user should never fail to log in, that's their problem.
Aaaah where's the weekend.
16:13
guys
I'm off
long day as often
War
War
16:26
@HéctorÁlvarez lmao
seen that before
some people
:facepalm:
you must be the 1 in your 200
17:18
What's the best version of SQL to learn next if you understand MySQL?
Mssql and Mysql are not largely different.
18:01
MySQL and SQL Server do have significant differences
MariaDB obviously the mysql cousin is an easy step, after that, within open source I would look at postgres next
18:19
Has anyone had to work with Citadel 4 database? I am trying to figure out a way to import it in to a SQL database using SSIS package but the ODBCdriver seems to erroring out. But at the same time I can query Citadel 4 database from Microsoft Query program that comes with office and import it into excel using that driver.
 
5 hours later…
Dan
Dan
23:23
I am looking for a free, easy-to-script Postgres GUI client that isn't pgAdmin. I saw TeamSQL, but literally all reddit posts on the tool was questionable promotional posts. Is there an open-source gui tool that marries nicely with the open-source postgres?

« first day (2203 days earlier)      last day (2115 days later) »